Dear MARMAM colleagues

We are pleased to announce the recent publication of our paper “PCB pollution 
continues to impact populations of orcas and other dolphins in European waters”.

Jepson, P. D., Deaville, R., Barber, J. L., Aguilar, À., Borrell, A., Murphy, 
S., Barry, J., Brownlow, A., Barnett, J., Berrow, S., Cunningham, A. A., 
Davison, N., ten Doeschate, M., Esteban, R., Ferreira, M., Foote, A. D., Genov, 
T., Giménez, J., Loveridge, J., Llavona, Á., Martin, V., Maxwell, D. L., 
Papachlimitzou, A., Penrose, R., Perkins, M. W., Smith, B., de Stephanis, R., 
Tregenza, N., Verborgh, P., Fernandez, A. & Law, R. J. (2016) PCB pollution 
continues to impact populations of orcas and other dolphins in European waters. 
Sci. Rep. 6, 18573; doi: 10.1038/srep18573.

Abstract: Organochlorine (OC) pesticides and the more persistent 
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) have well established dose-dependent 
toxicities to birds, fish and mammals in experimental studies, but the actual 
impact of OC pollutants on European marine top predators remains unknown. Here 
we show that several cetacean species have very high mean blubber PCB 
concentrations likely to cause population declines and suppress population 
recovery. In a large pan-European meta-analysis of stranded (n=929) or biopsied 
(n=152) cetaceans, three out of four species:- striped dolphins (SDs), 
bottlenose dolphins (BNDs) and killer whales (KWs) had mean PCB levels that 
markedly exceeded all known marine mammal PCB toxicity thresholds. Some 
locations (e.g. western Mediterranean Sea, south-west Iberian Peninsula) are 
global PCB “hotspots” for marine mammals. Blubber PCB concentrations initially 
declined following a mid-1980s EU ban, but have since stabilised in UK harbour 
porpoises and SDs in the western Mediterranean Sea. Some small or declining 
populations of BNDs and KWs in the NE Atlantic were associated with low 
recruitment, consistent with PCB-induced reproductive toxicity. Despite 
regulations and mitigation measures to reduce PCB pollution, their 
biomagnification in marine food webs continues to cause severe impacts among 
cetacean top predators in European seas.

The paper can be downloaded directly from the journal Scientific Reports;

http://www.nature.com/articles/srep18573

Best wishes


Rob




Rob Deaville
Project Manager
UK Cetacean Strandings Investigation Programme
The Wellcome Building
Institute of Zoology
Zoological Society of London
Regent's Park
London NW1 4RY

tel: +44 (0)20 7449 6672  fax: +44 (0)20  7483 2237

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